Aged 92 when interviewed, Ada says swimming has become a passion and has given her a new lease of life.

Every week, her son collects her from home and drops her off at her local swimming pool in Great Harwood near Blackburn, Lancashire.

Ada puts on her swimsuit and cap, gets in the 20-metre pool, and swims about 60 lengths of backstroke in a session, which lasts 30 to 45 minutes. She's proof that it's never too late to get active.

"I really love swimming," says Ada, who has three children, five grandchildren, and 15 great-grandchildren.

"I used to be petrified of water," she says. "But when I reached 75, I decided I wanted to do things that I'd always been scared of doing."

Her daughter taught her to swim. "She got me in the water and took my hands," says Ada, from Clayton-le-Moors. "That's how I got started."

Nice and easy

"I've got my own rhythm," Ada says. "I like to take my time. I take it nice and easy. "My daughter taught me the breast stroke, but I felt more comfortable on my back. Swimming is great. It works every muscle in your body."

She says that as a child she never had the chance to learn, but swimming is now her main form of exercise. She takes part in an annual swim-a-mile fundraising challenge to raise money for the Wright Foundation, a heart and lung charity.

Ada is no fitness fanatic, but says she likes to be active. At home, if she's not doing the housework, she's using her skipping rope or doing a spot of gardening.

Every morning after her bath, Ada performs a few stretches in her bedroom. "I massage my feet and legs," she says. "I stretch up, stand on my toes, and I stretch my neck."

She was a regular at a local dance studio for 14 years until it closed. She practised ballroom dancing, from the foxtrot to the quick step.

'I like keeping myself busy'

"I'm active because I like it," Ada says. "I'm not particularly health obsessed, I just like being active and keeping myself busy."

Not even illness has slowed Ada down. The retired dressmaker developed bowel cancer five years ago, but made a full recovery.

"My consultant said, 'Ada, don't let anyone put you off swimming. It's the best exercise for you.' Well, I took that man's words to heart."